****** FASCIOLOPSIS BUSKI ******
Common name: Giant intestinal fluke
Disease: Fasciolopsiasis,
Fasciolopsis edema
Morphology:
1. Adult
is large, fleshy or broadly ovate or more often appears as elongatedly ovoidal,
measuring from 20 – 75mm. The integument is spinose and there no cephalic cone.
The oral sucker is about 0.5 mm and the ventral sucker is 2–3 mm. The
intestinal ceca are unbranched and have characteristic indentations. It has a
pair of highly dendritic testes which are found one after the other in the
posterior half of the fluke. The branched ovary lies to the right of the
midline & opposite it is the coiled uterus.
2. Ova
is almost identical with those of the ova of F. hepatica. They measure from 130–150u
x 80–85u. They are operculated & unembryonated when laid. The yolk granules
are evenly distributed throughout the egg. In F. hepatica, there is clumping of
yolk granules.
1st Intermediate
Host: Segmentina
2nd Intermediate
Host: Trapa natans,
Trapa bicornis,
Eleocharis tuberosa (water chestnut)
Life cycle
****** ECHINOSTOMA ILOCANUM ******
Common name: Garrison’s Fluke
Synonyms: Fascioletta
ilocanum, Euparydium ilocanum
Morphology:
1. Adult
measures 2.5–6.5mm. It is attenuated posteriorly and the anterior portion is provided
with a circumoral disc surrounded by spines which is diagnostic of this
parasite. The oral sucker is situated at the center of the oral disc and the
ventral sucker is located at the anterior 5th of the body. The integument
is surrounded by plaque–like scales; the testes is deeply lobed and lie one
behind the other in the 3rd fourth of the body with the lobed ovary
situated in front of the anterior testes. The vitellaria are medium–sized follicles
situated in lateral fields. The uterine coils fill the intercecal field between
the anterior testes and the ventral sucker.
2. Ova
is straw–colored, operculated and immature when laid, measuring about 83–116u. They
are broadly ovoidal in shape with the presence of a distinct germ ball.
1st Intermediate
Host: Gyraulus convexiusculus (planorbid
snail)
2nd Intermediate
Host: Pila conica or Pila luzonica
Life cycle
THE
HETEROPHYIDS GROUP OF INTESTINAL FLUKES
General characteristics
1. Smallest
but considered as the deadliest of all trematodes
2. Pyriform
in shape measuring from 1–2 mm.
3. Rounded
posteriorly and attenuated anteriorly with their cuticle surrounded by fine
scale–like spines.
4. Provided
with oral, ventral and genital suckers.
5. With
gonotyl surrounding lip of the genital sucker which is surrounded by spines.
6. They
are endemic in the Philippines.
7. Diagnosis
is based on the recovery of eggs in stool
****** HETEROPHYES HETEROPHYES ******
Common name: Heterophyiasis
Morphology:
1. Adult
measures from 1–2 mm, pyriform in shape and inhabit the small intestine of man
and fish eating mammals. The oral sucker is small, the ventral sucker is about 3x
the size of the oral sucker, thick walled and muscular and is situated in the
anterior 3rd of the body, the genital sucker is situated at the left
posterior border of the ventral sucker and is provided with multidigitate
spines. They have 2 oval testes arranged obliquely at the sub–caudal region,
small oval ovary lies at the anterior portion of the posterior 3rd
of the body. There are 14 large polygonal vitelline follicles at the lateral
portions of the worms.
2. Ova
measures 28–30u, ovoidal, operculated and embryonated when laid. Hatching takes
place only upon ingestion of the ova by the intermediate host.
1st Intermediate
Host: Pironella, Crithidia
2nd Intermediate
Host: Freshwater fish, mullet and tilapia
Life cycle
****** METAGONIMUS YOKOGAWAI ******
Common name: Yokogawai’s fluke
Disease: Metagonimiasis
Morphology:
1. Adult
characteristic is almost similar to H. heterophyes except for the fusion of the
ventrogenital suckers and deflected towards on side of the body; a pair of
testes, one bigger than the other.
2. Ova
is similar to H. heterophyes
1st Intermediate
Host:
Semisulcospira libertina
2nd Intermediate
Host: Plecoglossus altivelis, odontobutis
obscurus,
Salmo
perryi
Life cycle
****** HAPLORCHIS YOKOGAWAI ******
Disease: Haplorchiasis
Morphology:
Adult is similar to M. yokogawai
except that it has only one large testes located at the subcaudal portion
Ova are identical with that of the
other heterophyids
2nd Intermediate
Host: Frogs, shrimps, mullet
1 comment:
Impressive
Post a Comment